Elena Borisovna Frolova (Russian: Елена Борисовна Фролова; born 1 October 1969, in Riga) is a Russian singer-songwriter, composer, and poet. She is author and performer of songs based on poems by many Russian poets of twentieth century,[1] including Marina Tsvetaeva,[2] Sophia Parnok,[3] Joseph Brodsky,[4] Anna Barkova, Andrei Belyi, Varlam Shalamov, Maria Petrovykh,[5] Veniamin Blazhenny,[6] Bulat Okudzhava,[7] and many others,[8][9][10][11][12] as well as her own poetry.[13] Frolova is one of few performers who uses Russian folk instrument gusli and ancient harp,[14] along with classical six-string guitar for the accompaniment. During 25 years of work she created more than 630 songs[15] and published more than 40 music albums.[16][17][18]

Elena Frolova
Elena Frolova with gusli (Photo by Margarita Kabakova)
Elena Frolova with gusli
(Photo by Margarita Kabakova)
Background information
Birth nameElena Frolova
Born (1969-10-01) 1 October 1969 (age 54)
Riga, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union
GenresSinger-songwriter, author song, ethnic Russian music, world music
Occupation(s)singer, composer and poet
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar, gusli
Years active1986–present
WebsiteHer site on bards.ru (Russian)

Biography edit

Born in Riga, Frolova composed her first song at age of 15.[19] That was song on poem "I wrote on the slate" by Marina Tsvetaeva.[20] She was a winner of many song and music festivals, including the Second All-Union Festival in Tallinn in 1988.[21] Since 1988 Elena performed together with Vera Evushkina, in the author's duet "VerLen".[22] She is a co-founder and active member of creative group "ASiA", together with Tatiana Aleshina, Alexander Derevyagin and Nicholai Yakimov.[23] She is a member of juries in Russian art song festivals, including Grushinsky festival. During last few years, Elena made a number of tours in trio "Trilogy" with performer of Russian romance Julia Ziganshina and singer-songwriter Elmira Galeeva,[24][25][26]

Since 1989, Elena Frolova worked in Moscow Theatre of Music and Poetry directed by Elena Kamburova. She is a member of Union of Russian Writers. Since 1991, she made many tours with her solo concerts in Russia, Germany, Italy, France, and Israel. Her songs on poems by Russian poets of the Silver Age and her own poetry brought her wide recognition. According to Marina Gershenovich : "The cycle of songs based on poems by Marina Tsvetaeva makes you to believe in the idea of reincarnation. The image of Marina is just as real as your own perception of reality. Coming through the music and voice of Elena, Tsvetaeva rebels, loves, tell prophecies, makes fun, and creates... One can bring back from the death someone he truly loves. Elena Frolova does it with her songs."[27] A documentary about work by Frolova on poetry by Tsvetaeva was created by Irina Roerig[28]

 
Elena Frolova playing gusli
(Photo by Margarita Kabakova)

In 1996, Elena has mastered a new instrument, gusli, to perform Russian folk and other songs.

Since 2002, she participates in World Music festivals and concerts in Russia, many countries around the Europe, Israel, Argentina, and Mexico. She performed in Théâtre de la Ville, Bienvenue à la Maison des Cultures du Monde and Théâtre des Abbesses in Paris, Teatro de la República in Mexico, as well as in Barcelona, Madrid, Brussels and Antwerp. Since 2008 she has been a regular guest at the Festival of Arts in Naxos.

Frolova took part in the congress "The historical experience of the Soviet Communist totalitarianism: the opposition to Gulag" in Milan in 2003 with the program on poems by Varlam Shalamov. In March 2004, she represented Russia at the First International Festival "Eurasia Diva" in Moscow.[29]

In 2007 she published a book of her poetry, "Song for Eurydice".[30] Frolova also participates in creation of animated movies. She performed romance Don't wake her up at dawn... on words by Afanasy Fet in My Love by Aleksandr Petrov and composed music for animated version of The Legend of Lady Godiva[31]

Poetry edit

Elena composed many songs on her own poetry, one of the most popular being A Straw.[32] Many of her poems and songs have strong spiritual and Christian components, such as her Journey into Eden,[33] a song dedicated to Francis of Assisi,[34] and Disciple Day.

Concerts published on YouTube edit

Selected discography edit

  • Songs on her own poetry
    • Wanderer 1995
    • My white sparrow, 1995
    • Heaven loves you, 1997
    • Dear road, Russian folk songs; poetry by Sergey Yesenin and Frolova, 2002
    • Travel to Paradise, 2005
    • Solar thread, 2006
    • Songs of heart, 2009
    • Lada, Russian folk songs, Esenin and Frolova, 2009, records at thankyou.ru
  • Songs on poetry by Tsvetaeva
    • Angel and lion, Tsvetaeva, Blok and Mandelshtam, 1992
    • Annunciation Day, 1995 records
    • My Tsvetaeva part 1 and part 2, 2002
    • El sol de la tarde, 2008
    • Khvanyn'-Kolyvan, 2007
  • Discs with Vera Evushkina
    • Verlen, 1992
    • Listen by heart, 2008 (1996–1998, 2006 records)
    • Oh, listen!, 2003
  • My love, color the green, Tsvetaeva, Esenin and others, 1995
  • Dove flied, 1999
  • Poetry by Joseph Brodsky: Romance of a happy man, 2010
  • Clouds are passing by, 2005, poetry by Parnok, Shalamov, Blazhenny, Tsvetaeva, Gershenovich and others
  • A little theater on the small planet of Earth, 2009, poetry by Andrei Belyi
  • Letter, 2003, poetry by Varlam Shalamov
  • Wind from Viagolosa, poetry by Sophia Parnok, 2002
  • A concert, 2003, songs on poems by Anna Barkova, Osip Mandelshtam, Veniamin Blazhenny, Varlam Shalamov, Anna Akhmatova and others
  • Willow bird, songs on poems by Marina Gershenovich, Irina Ratushinskaya, Veniamin Blazhenny and others, 1999
  • Bright holiday of homelessness, 1995, Brodsky, Tsvetaeva, Yuri Levitansky, Mikhail Kuzmin
  • Poetry by Dmitry Strotsev: part 1, part 2, link, 2002
  • Seconda Parte, disk in collaboration with creative group AZIA, 2002
  • A concert, part 1, part 2, 2003
  • Mandelshtam Street, 2005, songs on poetry by Osip Mandelshtam
  • Stairs of love, poetry by Leonid Gubanov, 2008
  • Discs with Elmira Galeeva and Yulia Ziganshina
    • Trilogia, 2006
    • Rosemary, sage..., 2008
  • Dear Enemy, 2007, poetry by Anna Barkova
  • Russian Asian, 2007, Barkova, Frolova, Parnok
  • Running girl – Russian Psyche, a concert, 2009
  • IZ NEDR И НА ВЕТВЬ, 2009
  • Bird Tango, Brodsky, Tsvetaeva, Blazhenny, Petrova, Frolova, 2010
  • A concert, 2010
  • Amor mio. Αγάπη μου. My love, Folk songs, poetic translations/texts to Russian by Frolova, 2011
  • A concert, 2011
  • Ves, Soundtrack to the poetry collection, poetry by Strotsev, Gershenovich, Vertinsky, Gumilev, Zabolotsky, Levitansky, 2013

References edit

  1. ^ Spiritual triptych Blessed are the humble in spirit published by Frolova on YouTube: Introduction, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
  2. ^ To Anna Akhmatova, words by Marina Tsvetaeva, music by Frolova
  3. ^ You are neither good nor mean, lyrics my Sophia Parnok, music by Frolova
  4. ^ Sonetik, words by Joseph Brodsky, music by Frolova
  5. ^ Do not complain, my confessions are crude, lyrics by Maria Petrovykh, music by Frolova
  6. ^ The wheel, words by Veniamin Blazhenny, music by Frolova
  7. ^ Blue balloon, song and music by Bulat Okudzhava, arrangement by Frolova
  8. ^ Insomnia, Homer, lyrics by Osip Mandelstam, music by Vitaly Kharisov
  9. ^ The vain lullaby, words by Marina Gershenovich, music by Frolova
  10. ^ "I don't want to forget you...", words by Leonid Gubanov
  11. ^ Love is not an angle, words by Dmitry Strotsev, music by Frolova; White mother, words and music by Dmitry Strotsev
  12. ^ There, text by Tatiana Aleshina, inspired by Sodade
  13. ^ Solar thread of Elena Frolova Archived 12 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine by Zakhar Prilepin, Novaya gazeta, 07-04-28
  14. ^ Skyphos Songs, sound of reconstructed ancient (500 BCE) angular harp found by archeologists in Altai Mountains: music and songs by Elena Frolova on Ishtar and other "Skyphos poems" by Marina Tsvetaeva
  15. ^ Texts of songs by Frolova (Russian)[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ The language to express the ineffable. Yelena Frolova at the crossroads of spiritual poetry and art song by Collection, Youth Orthodox missionary and educational magazine
  17. ^ "Page of Elena Frolova at website of Theater of Music and Poetry by Elena Kamburova". Archived from the original on 31 March 2009. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  18. ^ Singer Elena Frolova: "I took Gusli in my hands after meeting with people of Irkutsk Archived 6 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine by Irina Zheglova, Komsomolskaya Pravda, 7 February 2010]
  19. ^ Elena Frolova: There are visible and invisible cultures in Russia, by Vera Kopylova, Moskovskij Komsomolets, 15 May 2010
  20. ^ "I wrote on the slate" by Tsvetaeva
  21. ^ Along the free trace of spring water Archived 28 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, by Natalia Savelieva, Truth and Life, a monthly journal, N3, 2002
  22. ^ Little sister, poem by Arseny Tarkovsky, music by Vera Evushkina; Concert with Vera Evushkina in 2011 Part 1, Part 2
  23. ^ "Website of project ASIA+". Archived from the original on 18 August 2012. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  24. ^ "Enigma", words by Anatoly D'Aktil, music by V.Sidorov, performance by "Trilogy", Frolova, Ziganshina and Galeeva
  25. ^ "What is heart so...", poem by Mikhail Matusovsky, music by Tikhon Khrennikov, performance by "Trilogy", Frolova, Ziganshina and Galeeva
  26. ^ Gazel of Remembrance, poem by Garcia Lorca, music by Vitaly Kharisov, performance by Elena Frolova and Julia Ziganshina
  27. ^ Artistic biography of Frolova
  28. ^ "Patriots and poets: Frolova and Tsvetaeva". Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  29. ^ "Divas of Eurasia". A friendly festival of ethnic culture (Russian) Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, P.Znameny, Literaturnaya Gazeta, №10, 2004
  30. ^ Elena Frolova, "Song for Eurydice" (Russian: Песня для Эвридики), Вита Нова, ISBN 978-5-93898-142-3; 2007
  31. ^ The Legend of Lady Godiva.
  32. ^ A Straw; Do not leave me so fast, When I will tire of life, YouTube records
  33. ^ Journey into Eden №2", YouTube record
  34. ^ "Franciscus Assisiensis", also dedicated to Viktor Luferov, words and music by Frolova

External links edit